352 SCIENCE PROGRESS. 



the "Sixth City" of Hissarlik no Mykenaean settlement is 

 known on the mainland of Asia Minor. Isolated vases are 

 reported from Pitane in JEoYis, from Mylasa in Karia, and 

 from Telmessos in Lykia, and the early necropolis of 

 Termera (Assarlik) near Halikarnassos (Budrum), though 

 of distinctly indigenous character, is strongly influenced, at 

 the very end of the period, by late Mykenaean models from 

 the neighbouring islands. Among the latter, besides the 

 great settlement at Ialysos in Rhodes, every island appears 

 to be represented from Rhodes southwards to Crete, and 

 northwards as far as Patmos. Both in Melos and in Thera 

 Mykenaean settlements are found distinctly superimposed 

 on the Cycladic already mentioned, and others are indicated 

 by isolated finds throughout the Archipelago. On the 

 mainland of Greece, Lakonia is represented by two sites 

 Kampos and Vaphio (Amyhlae), the latter with a princely 

 "beehive tomb" like those of Mykenae ; Argolis by 

 Mykense, the Heraion temple-site, Tiryns, Nauplia, 

 Trcezen, Epidauros, and the islands Kalauria and ^gina ; 

 Attica by Athens, Eleusis, Acharnae (Menidi), Aliki, Kara, 

 Spata, and Thorikos ; the rest of Central Greece by 

 Megara, Antikyra, Thebes, Tanagra, Levadia, Orchomenos 

 and several smaller sites in the Kopais marshes; North 

 Greece by Pagasae (Dimini near Volo) in Thessaly. 



$*]. In the West there are no Mykensean settlements 

 known further than Kephallenia and Ithaka; but Mykensean 

 vases occur in domed rock tombs at Syracuse, and there is 

 much indirect evidence of Mykenaean influence on the later 

 Bronze Age style in Sicily and South Italy. Further than 

 this, it is clear that on the Adriatic coast of Italy Mykenaean 

 imports and models determined the character of the later 

 Bronze Age, and that in the transition from Bronze to 

 Iron at Hallstatt in the Tyrol, a definitely Mykenaean strain 

 can be detected. But in both these cases the contact is 

 with later and already quite decadent types, such as are re- 

 presented in the Lower Town of Mykenae ; in particular 

 fibulae are always present, and of these the secondary and 

 distinctly Sub-Mykenaean types are only very rarely absent. 



38. Eastwards, Mykensean imports are found frequently 



